Wednesday, December 7th 2022
Micron Delivers the World's Most Advanced Client SSD Featuring 232-Layer NAND Technology
Micron Technology, Inc.,, today announced it is shipping the Micron 2550 NVMe SSD to global PC OEM customers for use in mainstream laptops and desktops. The 2550 is the world's first client SSD to ship using NAND over 200 layers. Delivering performance that eclipses the competition through its density and power advantages, the 2550 provides users with responsiveness and the low power consumption needed to extend battery life for work and home PCs.
"We focused on delivering a superior user experience for PC users with this SSD," said Praveen Vaidyanathan, vice president and general manager of the Client Storage Group at Micron. "The new 2550 SSD builds on our established and broadly adopted PCIe Gen4 architecture. It also incorporates Micron's industry-leading 232-layer NAND and focuses on thermal architecture and power design. These capabilities deliver impressive application performance and phenomenal power savings."The Micron 2550 SSD enables faster, more responsive applications in mainstream PC platforms, including gaming, consumer and business client devices. Micron's innovations, such as predictive cache optimization, improve users' experiences and establish new category zeniths for PCMark 10 benchmarks. The SSD transfers files up to 112% faster, runs office productivity applications up to 67% faster, loads major games up to 57% faster, and runs content creation applications up to 78% faster than comparable competing products. It also delivers breakneck sequential read performance of up to 5 gigabytes per second and sequential write performance of up to 4 gigabytes per second, which is 43% and 33% faster than the previous SSD generation, respectively.
Power savings are provided through Micron's optimization of entry and exit into self-initiated energy saving states, use of an advanced process node for the controller, and elimination of DRAM via Host Memory Buffer (HMB) technology. Innovations that collectively deliver battery-sipping sleep power consumption under 2.5 milliwatts, active idle power consumption under 150 milliwatts, and active power consumption below 5.5 watts. These advances enable longer battery life for daily computing needs.
"We expect PCIe Gen4 drives will remain the primary interface for notebooks and desktops into 2026," said Greg Wong, principal analyst at Forward Insights. "Leading-edge Gen4 SSDs, such as the new Micron 2550, deliver improved user experiences and provide OEMs with an attractive storage solution for their system designs."
The Micron 2550 SSD is available in 22x80mm, 22x42mm and 22x30mm form factors and comes in 256 GB, 512 GB and 1 TB capacity points. These options provide system designers the flexibility to build PCs with the right mix of performance, size, weight and capacity.
Source:
Micron
"We focused on delivering a superior user experience for PC users with this SSD," said Praveen Vaidyanathan, vice president and general manager of the Client Storage Group at Micron. "The new 2550 SSD builds on our established and broadly adopted PCIe Gen4 architecture. It also incorporates Micron's industry-leading 232-layer NAND and focuses on thermal architecture and power design. These capabilities deliver impressive application performance and phenomenal power savings."The Micron 2550 SSD enables faster, more responsive applications in mainstream PC platforms, including gaming, consumer and business client devices. Micron's innovations, such as predictive cache optimization, improve users' experiences and establish new category zeniths for PCMark 10 benchmarks. The SSD transfers files up to 112% faster, runs office productivity applications up to 67% faster, loads major games up to 57% faster, and runs content creation applications up to 78% faster than comparable competing products. It also delivers breakneck sequential read performance of up to 5 gigabytes per second and sequential write performance of up to 4 gigabytes per second, which is 43% and 33% faster than the previous SSD generation, respectively.
Power savings are provided through Micron's optimization of entry and exit into self-initiated energy saving states, use of an advanced process node for the controller, and elimination of DRAM via Host Memory Buffer (HMB) technology. Innovations that collectively deliver battery-sipping sleep power consumption under 2.5 milliwatts, active idle power consumption under 150 milliwatts, and active power consumption below 5.5 watts. These advances enable longer battery life for daily computing needs.
"We expect PCIe Gen4 drives will remain the primary interface for notebooks and desktops into 2026," said Greg Wong, principal analyst at Forward Insights. "Leading-edge Gen4 SSDs, such as the new Micron 2550, deliver improved user experiences and provide OEMs with an attractive storage solution for their system designs."
The Micron 2550 SSD is available in 22x80mm, 22x42mm and 22x30mm form factors and comes in 256 GB, 512 GB and 1 TB capacity points. These options provide system designers the flexibility to build PCs with the right mix of performance, size, weight and capacity.
34 Comments on Micron Delivers the World's Most Advanced Client SSD Featuring 232-Layer NAND Technology
These are going to be lameee!
HMB, those endurance and performance figures. They don't even make sense with the marketing jargon.
These should not be used in any system in production or deemed critical.
What I want to know is: Where's the 2 TB model?
For everything they are touting? No.
Going by their product brief, no 2TB model planned and the 256GB is only going to be out by mid '23.
And IMO, their in-house controllers are - well not bad but definitely not the best.
Isn't that the size used in Xboxes Series X?
the SK Hynix P41 Platinum, one of the most efficient performance oriented SSDs on this planet, consumes nearly 5 times more power on idle, which is the most important metric. And its also rated to consume >30% more power when active, which is not so important, but thats still a substantial amount. I'd take my battery life anytime over the extra performance that i would never see in majority of real life usage of a laptop. Not to mention the less amount of heat generated for a quieter fan and without the need of a heatsink, although admittedly, the P41 doesn't need one either, but itll still run hotter inside a constrained laptop or compact oem system meant for your parents.
(Yes i know not always, but it's a trend)
I have personally used these in their intended environment (thousands) for some pretty big arrays and fast ceph clusters. Intel, Micron, Samsung and Kingston have pretty big presence in the DC SSD space. The performance is maybe a little above average in other models average, but they kill it in longevity and like samsung generally integrated features.
www.micron.com/products/ssd/usage/data-center-ssd
They probably arent going to come out with a 990 competitor, or even compete with any of the mega fast consumer drives. That space is niche anyway, we care. But average gamers and consumers in general are still wide eyed at the fact that SSDs are so fast as is.
Micron makes there money selling 15tb SSDs to DCs so I can run fail over SQL clusters and beat them to death for years on end.
Sorry wasnt an attack on you or anything. Not sure if this post seems aggressive, just my take on increasing the field of view of other readers while piggybacking off what you said. AFAIC they released this as a "take it or leave it" brand recognition move in the consumer space at the very least.